Sail GP Season 4: Team Spain wins Final in San Francisco

— All images by Sail GP Media.

That was a great final to watch. Review live stream in previous post here. Nice to see Nicole van der Velden (She did first Nacra 17 Olympic campaign) on board and winning with Botin and the Spanish team which was also built on Phil Robertson’s helm days.

Report below sent by Sail GP media. Official web https://sailgp.com/


It’s a Spanish Cinderella Story in San Francisco: 

Los Gallos claim SailGP Season 4 Grand Final title 

Four major titles in a super Sunday of sport for the Spanish, as Spain secure $2Million in prize money by taking the SailGP Grand Final in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – July 14, 2024 – They say things come in threes, but for Spain it’s four from four, as Los Gallos snatch their first SailGP Championship title, adding to major wins in the Euros 2024, the Wimbledon final, and LIV Golf on a Sunday of sport the Spanish won’t soon forget. Spain defeated league heavyweights Australia and New Zealand who finished second and third respectively in today’s winner-takes-all Grand Final race.

Putting it together when it matters most, it was once again all about the startline which driver, Diego Botin, executed to perfection – as his team took flight in the Grand Final, pushing ahead of trans-Tasman rivals straight from the starting blocks.

Unable to keep the smile from his face, Botin enthused: “Beating the Kiwis and Aussies in the Grand Final here in San Francisco – it’s amazing. We’re over the moon. It’s been a big grind and we’ve been through a lot in this League – last season we were last in the scores, and look – this season we win! I think we have an amazing team; let’s see if we can keep it together and keep the ball rolling.”

With Australia hot on Spain’s heels for the duration of the Grand Final race, it was all down to moments before the final maneuver where Australia lost critical momentum – citing technical error once again. In a drag race to the finish, Botin soared into the win, delighting cheering Spanish fans, with plenty to celebrate on this super Sunday of sport.

Slingsby acknowledged how it can all come down to sheer bad luck: “It was a normal tack, but somehow the board came off the lock. We’ve done thousands of tacks this week and it hasn’t happened at all, then today it happened in the final $2Million dollar race. What do you do? It’s just unlucky.” 

Australia was the only team to secure multiple fleet race wins in San Francisco, securing three victories out of five total fleet races – proving their usual San Francisco form, despite falling short in the Final. 

Slingsby continued, “Honestly, the team sailed the best we’ve sailed, almost ever, today. We had that mentality the whole race, even when we were behind, so I’m so proud of this team and the way they sailed. I’m honored to be part of it all.”

Following weeks of speculation about the viability of a Spanish team on the startline next season, Botin’s standout performance on San Francisco Bay will have silenced a few critics – and attracted the right kind of attention to hopefully keep the team away from the chopping block come November.

And a nail biting Final wasn’t the only drama on Championship Sunday – with Fleet Races 4 and 5 filled with their own excitement. That included France’s risky dice with the Danes, which saw Les Bleus out of Fleet Race 5 – left with a broken rudder and an 12 event point penalty (eight season points).

Expressing his disappointment, driver Quentin Delapierre reflected: “Sometimes you prefer to stay at home, and today I think that was the case. At the last tack I just didn’t see the Danish and we crashed with them. We didn’t finish the job and that’s really painful for everybody on board right now. But I’m incredibly proud of what the team achieved, and I think the overall ranking will not show what we’ve done this season, particularly here where we had an unbelievable Saturday.”

Despite being the on-form team throughout the season, New Zealand’s third-place position proved what makes the winner-takes-all Grand Final as cut-throat as it gets. Driver Peter Burling said: “We’re all feeling the pain at the moment, but we’re really proud of the way the team has gone about their business. We’ll go back, reflect on that and come out swinging next season.”

Crowds of thousands enjoyed up close viewing of the unfolding action from the grandstands in the Race Stadium at Marina Green across the weekend, with a 50-strong spectator fleet on water on each day of the event weekend.

Looking ahead to the 2024/25 Season, SailGP has confirmed that, for the first time ever, teams will get vital training at two pre season training camps in Bermuda and Dubai, beginning in August and October, respectively. 

The 2024/2025 Season will begin with the Emirates Dubai Sail Grand Prix presented by P&O Marinas on November 23-24, 2024. More thrills, more spills and more action, the upcoming season will also deliver even more fun by the water – building on SailGP’s hospitality offering, with exceptional food, live music and world-class entertainment. Ticket categories for all events will be announced in due course.

Ends

SAILGP SEASON 4 LEADERBOARD //

1 // Spain 

2 // Australia  

3 // New Zealand

4 // ROCKWOOL Denmark

5 // Emirates GBR 

6 // Canada 

7 // France

8 // United States 

9 // Germany 

10 // Switzerland 

SAN FRANCISCO SAILGP EVENT RESULTS //

1 // Australia  39 points

2 // ROCKWOOL Denmark  38 points 

3 // Emirates Great Britain  35 points

4 // New Zealand  33 points

5 // Canada  28 points 

6 // Spain  26 points

7 // France  16 points

8 // Germany  14 points

9 // United States 13 points

10 // Switzerland  12 points

SAILGP SEASON 4 IMPACT LEAGUE FINAL STANDINGS //

1 // Emirates Great Britain // 602 points

2 // ROCKWOOL Denmark // 598 points

3 // Switzerland // 590 points

4 // France // 571 points

5 // New Zealand // 560 points

6 // Australia // 544 points

7 // Germany 513

8 // Canada 502 points

9 // Spain 486 points

10 // United States 479 points